To get the whole world out of bed And washed, and dressed, and warmed, and fed, To work, and back to bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. The Dial - Page 101edited by - 1912Full view - About this book
| 1913 - 536 pages
...parson, on reading which the breasts of a pious Liberal party must glow with honest satisfaction : To get the whole world out of bed And washed, and...bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. And Mr Masefield's hero, who is supposed to show some revolutionary spirit, is actually abashed by... | |
| Frank Sidgwick - 1915 - 88 pages
...make that moment good ; And you who walked and would not run, Have lost the race you might have won. To get the whole world out of bed, And washed, and...bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. The poet sees, in those four verses, Gleams of everlasting mercies. So when the morning rises red,... | |
| Stuart Petre Brodie Mais - 1917 - 344 pages
...present state : You think the Church an outworn fetter ; Kane, keep it, till you've built a better. . . . To get the whole world out of bed And washed, and...bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. These last four lines are worth all the rest of the poem put together. It is the first time that that... | |
| George Louis Beer - 1917 - 354 pages
...civilization progresses and as nature is mastered, they become less prominent though actually no less vital. " To get the whole world out of bed And washed, and...bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain." Man is, however, not satisfied with mere subsistence. His wants have a capacity of infinite expansion... | |
| John Masefield - 1918 - 550 pages
...agree it's out of date, One does too much, another shirks, Unjust, I grant; but still ... it works. To get the whole world out of bed And washed, and dressed, and wanned, and fed, To work, and back to bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. Then, as to... | |
| Hugh Thomson Kerr - 1926 - 202 pages
...confirms people in their own opinions, but he did put a question to this half-crazed, half-drunken man: ' Then, as to whether true or sham That book of Christ,...lie, say you, Where do you stand, suppose it true? ' This is the issue. Tell me, where do you stand? Supposing all that the Bible says of sin, of judgment,... | |
| 1926 - 432 pages
...apparently the least sane periods. In verse, four lines from a poem signed FS tell the same story : To get the whole world out of bed And washed and dressed...warmed and fed, To work and back to bed again, Believe mo, Saul, costs worlds of pain. It is exactly these " worlds of pain " that are the influence which... | |
| Lois Weis, Eleanor Farrar, Hugh G. Petrie - 1989 - 258 pages
...reality of the workplace itself. In all these comments, one is reminded of John Masefield's lines: To get the whole world out of bed. and washed, and...bed again. Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. 48 closer attention to whether we can solve our educational problems without dealing with the root... | |
| Michael W. Apple - 1995 - 240 pages
...pain of a different sort. We need only remember John Masefield's lines: To ger the whole world our of bed, and washed, and dressed, and warmed, and fed,...bed again. Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain ,63 A collective commitment to help eliminate this kind of pain is what we need to be about. The Other... | |
| Michael W. Apple - 1996 - 182 pages
...reality of the workplace itself. In all these comments, one is reminded of John Masefield's lines: To get the whole world out of bed, and washed, and...bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain. 108 The future world of paid and unpaid work that so many of our students will face, the structures... | |
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